A Source of Hope
The flourishing Church in India is destined to play a
leading role in ecclesiastical affairs
in the 21st century. in ecclesial affairs in the 21st century.
by Jeff Ziegler
Nearly two millennia ago, a doubting apostle saw, believed, and preached the Gospel to the ends of the earth. Fifteen hundred years later, a student at the University of Paris met Ignatius of Loyola, helped found the Jesuit order, and obeyed an order to accompany the Portuguese who were colonizing the East. The apostolic labors of St. Thomas
the Apostle and St. Francis Xavier have borne much fruit in the ensuing centuries. If demography is destiny, then
the Church in India, more than any other nation, is destined to play a leading role in ecclesial affairs in the 21st
century, much as the Church in France left its mark on the 13th century and the Church in Spain deeply influenced
the 16th. At the end of 2007, India’s Catholic population ranked 16th in the world, behind Brazil, Mexico, the Philippines, the United States, Italy, France, Spain, Colombia, Poland, Argentina, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Germany, Peru, Venezuela, and Nigeria. Yet more than the faithful of any other nation, India’s 18.6 million Catholics have fostered a culture in which priestly and religious vocations and Catholic institutions flourish.
India has more seminarians (14,120) than any other nation—nearly 5,000 more than second-ranked Brazil. (This
figure does not include India’s 10,875 high-school seminarians.) Between 1999 and 2007, the number of Indian
seminarians increased by an astounding 40 percent. Nearly 64 percent of India’s seminarians will be ordained
for religious orders rather than local dioceses. Between 1999 and 2007, the number of diocesan priests ministering in India rose by 24 percent, from 10,690 to 13,290—not counting the 1,032 diocesan priests serving in other nations—
while the number of religious-order priests rose by 33 percent, from 8,248 to 11,003. During the same time period,
the number of diocesan priests in the United States—which has 67.8 million Catholics—fell by 5 percent, and the
number of religious priests plummeted by 17 percent. Vocations to non-ordained religious life are flourishing as well. India has more nuns than any other nation (except Italy), and will soon rank first in the world if trends continue. Between 1999 and 2007, the number of professed women religious grew by 19 percent, from 79,608 to 94,450, during a time
when the number dropped by 23 percent
in the US, from 81,364 to 63,250.
During the same time period, the
number of non-ordained male religious
in India rose by 37 percent, from 2,558
to 3,502, while the number declined by
13 percent in the United States to 5,124.
Accompanying the continued growth
of the priesthood and religious life in
India is an institutional presence unmatched
anywhere in the world. India
has 10,240 Catholic elementary schools
with more than three million students—
more than any other nation in the world,
and more than all the nations of North
and Central America combined. India
has more than five thousand high
schools with over three million students—
again, more than any other nation,
and more than double the number
of Catholic high school students in all of
North and Central America.
There are more Catholic hospitals
in India than in all of North America.
Indeed, the Church in India has more
hospitals (754), medical dispensaries
(2,504), leprosaria (220), and orphanages
(2,327) than any other nation. These
institutions are desperately needed in a
nation where the per capita gross domestic
product is $2,900 but 42 percent
of the people live on less than $1.25
a day.
Sacramental statistics point to an
active missionary presence within India
and a seriousness with respect to
Catholic marriage. Nearly 17 percent of
baptisms in India are baptisms of adult
converts; in the United States, the figure
is 7 percent. Less than 6 percent of
Catholic weddings in India are mixed
marriages between a Catholic and non-
Catholic spouse; in the United States,
the figure is more than 27 percent.
In addition, Church authorities in
the United States annulled 22,174 marriages
in 2007; in India, the number
was 801. THRE RITES
While the majority of Catholics in India
belong to the Latin rite, the Church
there is also blessed with the presence
of two vibrant Eastern Catholic
Churches: the Syro-Malabar Catholic
Church and the Syro-Malankara Catholic
Church.
In A.D. 52, St. Thomas the Apostle
preached the Gospel in what is now the
southwestern Indian state of Kerala.
The St. Thomas Christians in time adopted
the Chaldean liturgical tradition,
now used by the Chaldean Catholic
Church and the separated Assyrian
Church of the East. When Portuguese
explorers encountered the St. Thomas
Christians in 1498, the latter professed
the primacy of the pope. By 1510, Portuguese
missionaries began to spread
the faith further up the coast at Goa.
The Latin Catholic hierarchy was
established with the founding of the
Diocese of Goa in 1533; its territory
stretched at one time from South Africa
to China. Even today, the archbishop of
Goa and Daman is also known as the
Primate of the East and the Patriarch of
the East Indies. Latin-rite Catholicism
established a much firmer foothold
with the arrival of St. Francis Xavier;
using Goa as his base, he preached in
western India from 1542 to 1545.
In time, the Portuguese Latin rite
hierarchy angered many St. Thomas
Christians down the coast by imposing
changes on the ancient Chaldean liturgy.
In 1653, thousands of St. Thomas
Christians left the Catholic Church and
sought communion with the Syrian
Orthodox Church, forming the Malankara
Orthodox Syrian Church, which
now numbers 2.5 million members. A
Malankara Orthodox Syrian monk and
bishop, Geevarghese Mar Ivanios, was
reconciled with the Holy See in 1930,
leading to the formation of the Syro-
Malankara Catholic Church, which
now has 413,000 faithful and celebrates
the sacred liturgy according to the Antiochan
tradition. The cause of beatification
of Archbishop Mar Ivanios—
hailed by G.K. Chesterton as the “Newman
of India” when the two met at a
Eucharistic congress in Dublin—was
opened in 2007.
The St. Thomas Christians who remained
faithful to Rome in time became
the Syro-Malabar Catholic Church.
Now the second-largest Eastern Catholic
Church (after the Ukrainian Greek
Catholic Church), it is a community of
astonishing vitality. Led by the Major
Archbishop of Ernakulam-Angamaly,
Cardinal Varkey Vithayathil, it has 3.7
million faithful, 9,121 priests, 2,607
seminarians, and an astounding 35,000
women religious. The typical Syro-
Malabar parish—there are 3,200 of
them—has 1,150 laity, three priests, and
11 nuns.
“Not attending Sunday Masses is almost
unthinkable for one growing up in
a Catholic family,” says Father George
Madathiparampil, vicar general of the St.
Thomas Syro-Malabar Diocese of Chicago,
as he discussed the vitality of the Syro-
Malabar Catholic Church. “It would
even invite social condemnation.”
“There is a great respect for the pope
and the bishops and hence, here is very
little chance of any act of challenge to
their authority,” he added. “Humanae
Vitae did not create any ripple of disobedience
among Indian Catholics.”
Both the Syro-Malabar and Syro-
Malankara Catholic Churches—unlike
the majority of Eastern Catholic
Churches—practice the discipline of
clerical celibacy.
“In India, renunciation of worldly
pleasures is the hallmark of a person
of God,” observed Archbishop Benedict
Varghese Gregorios Thangalathil,
who led the Syro-Malankara Catholic
Church from 1955 to 1994. “A celibate
Brahmachari is one who lives and
moves in Brahman (God),” he noted in
a 1993 essay. “If the non-Christians do
not fail to see the advantage of celibacy
for the good of religion and society, for
a Christian…the motives for celibacy
are much more deep and the benefits
are much more lofty. Jesus, who lived
a virgin life and exhorted his close followers
to leave all, including marriage
and family attachments, is the ultimate
inspiration and the most exalted model
of perfect renunciation.”
India has more
seminarians than
any other nation—
nearly 5,000 more
than second-ranked
Brazil. (This figure
does not include
India’s 10,875 high
school seminarians.)
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A MINOR ITY PRESENCE
The least Catholic area of the United
States is north-central Mississippi,
where the 65 counties that form the
Diocese of Jackson are 2.4 percent
Catholic. India is even less Catholic
than north-central Mississippi: only 1.6
percent of India’s 1.17 billion people
are Catholic. India remains an overwhelmingly
Hindu nation (81 percent)
with a substantial Muslim community
(13 percent) and a tiny Christian minority
(2.3 percent, including Catholics).
“In India the people have a sense of
religion deeply rooted in them,” says
Salesian Father Joseph Parippil, secretary
to the archbishop of Guwahati, a
northeastern Indian archdiocese where
only 1 percent of area residents are
Catholic. “All traditional families are
deeply religious whatever religion they
belong to. The common people do follow
their conscience and are ever seeking
the spiritual values.”
“Indian Catholic culture is closely
linked with the rich cultural tradition
of the country,” concurs Professor K.V.
Thomaskutty, a historian at St. John’s
College in Anchal, Kerala, and one of
the Syro-Malankara Catholic Church’s
most prominent laymen. The vice president
of Malankara Catholic Association
told CWR that “decaying but still
strong family bonds, dependence, love,
care, and associations are there in the
social structure of the Indian society.”
“Even Communism could not establish
atheistic Communism, though
so far three states have been ruled by
the Communist Party,” adds Father
Parippil. “Indian Communists are not
atheists.”
While India’s deeply religious non-
Christian culture in a sense supports
Catholic devotional life and the discipline
of clerical celibacy, it also has led
to the persecution of the Church. The
US State Department’s 2009 international
religious freedom report notes
that “the government has not admitted
new resident foreign missionaries since
the mid-1960s. There is no national law
barring a citizen or foreigner from professing
or propagating religious beliefs;
however, the Foreigners Act prohibits
speaking publicly against the religious
beliefs of others.”
Although India is a secular nation
whose constitution respects religious
freedom, five of India’s 29 state governments
have enacted anti-conversion
laws, and some states have turned a
blind eye to the persecution of Christians.
The Bharatiya Janata Party
(BJP)—which ruled the nation from
1999 to 2004 and remains a major political
party—has called for the passage of
anti-conversion laws throughout India.
Anti-Christian persecution in India
attracted worldwide attention in 2008
when violence in the northeastern state
of Orissa left 90 dead and fifty thousand
homeless (see “Kill Christians and
Destroy Their Institutions,” CWR, December
2008). Most anti-Christian persecution,
however—such as these incidents
that took place during the last six
months of 2009—is rarely mentioned in
the Western media.
• In July, the BJP government in Karnataka
refused to extend a property
lease and demanded that a Catholic
social service agency return 58
acres to the government. In 1977,
the state government had leased the
property to the agency to help care
for leprosy patients. Over the years,
the agency built 60 houses for leprosy
and AIDS patients, as well as a
factory, a job training center, and a
dispensary. Upon implementation,
the government decision will leave
360 homeless.
• On July 6, the Supreme Court of India
reversed an earlier court ruling
and decided to consider a lawsuit
by a Muslim student at a Catholic
school in Madhya Pradesh. The
Muslim student argued that the
school was infringing on his religious
rights by requiring male students
to be clean shaven. Bishop
Antony Chirayath of Sagar said he
was prepared to undergo a lengthy
legal battle to uphold the right of
the Church to set disciplinary policies
in its schools.
• On July 30, Father James Mukalel
was brutally murdered in Karnataka
as he was returning from the funeral
of another priest. No arrests
were made in the case.
• On September 5, Father Varghese
Thekkekut, a priest who heads a
mission school in Chhattisgarh,
was kicked and almost strangled
by two young men. No arrests
were made in the case.
• On September 29, Maoists in the
eastern state of Jharkand kidnapped
and beheaded a Catholic
police officer.
• In October, thousands of Catholics
in the eastern state of Chhattisgarh
faced the prospect of the destruction
of their homes as the government
developed plans to confiscate
largely Catholic villages and
agricultural land in order to build
industrial parks.
• On October 13, a BJP government
official in Madhya Pradesh gave
the Diocese of Jhabua three days
to provide the government with
details about Church property and
cemeteries. A Church spokesman
feared that the order portended
a government attempt to control
Church institutions.
• On the night of November 7, vandals
broke into a parish in Karnataka,
desecrated the tabernacle, stole
a chalice and two ciboria, and scattered
the hosts around the church.
Archbishop Bernard Moras of Bangalore—
India’s fifth-largest city—
denounced government and police
apathy.
• On November 20, the bishops of
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the southwestern Indian state
of Karnataka issued a statement
against the rise of “moral policing,”
in which Hindu fundamentalist
groups attack youths from
different religions when they socialize
together.
• On December 19, a politician and
his bodyguards used their rifles
to beat Father Lawrence Chittuparambil,
director of a Catholic
school in the northwestern state
of Punjab. Police did not arrest the
politician; after the Church closed
150 Catholic schools and the local
diocese organized a protest in
which 1,500 people blocked all entries
to the town where the school
was located, the politician turned
himself in to police.
• On December 20, a group of militants,
invoking the names of Hindu
deities, attacked a Christmas fair in
the central Indian state of Madhya
Pradesh and set fire to biblical representations.
The local archbishop
lamented that authorities rarely respond
to attacks on Christians.
Despite these and similar incidents
of violence and discrimination, Father
Hector D’Souza, provincial of the South
Asian Jesuits, told UCA News upon
leaving office in 2009:
What we need now is real persecution.
Persecution can purify us
of our lethargy, inactiveness, and
failure to live the Gospel. If purification
does not come within the
Church, God will use other means
to purify us. Wherever the Church
faced persecution, it has become
very strong. For example, the
Church in Gujarat…has become
alive and vibrant after Hindu radicals
targeted it a decade ago. The
Church in India was very vibrant
when the Bharatiya Janata Party
ruled India. People were out on
the streets for their rights. Similar
things happened after the attacks
on Christians in 2008. However,
the violence we have experienced
is only pinpricks. Real persecution
will come only when our structures
are affected.
MISS IONAR IES AND
REL IGIOUS
Although the Church in India is
known for its education and charitable
institutions, “Indian Catholicism will
be mainly associated with missionary
activity” in the decades ahead, Father
Madathiparampil believes.
The statistics support his claim: Catholic
missionary vocations are flourishing
in India. In 1968, Syro-Malabar
Bishop Sebastian Vayalil founded the
Missionary Society of St. Thomas the
Apostle to preach the Gospel in non-
Christian regions, principally in India.
Today, the order has more than 300
priests. In 1984, the late Father Jose
Kailett, a Latin rite priest, founded the
Heralds of the Good News, an Indian
missionary order whose priests serve
in areas where local vocations are lacking,
including Guatemala, Italy, Kenya,
the Netherlands, Papua New Guinea,
South Africa, Tanzania, Uganda, and
the United States. The order now has
211 priests and 745 seminarians.
These male religious congregations,
while growing, are not among the
world’s largest. Four of the nine largest
women’s religious communities, however,
are now Indian. Each has more
members than the Benedictines, Dominicans,
Sisters of Mercy of the Americas,
School Sisters of Notre Dame, and other
well-known women’s communities.
The Franciscan Clarist Congregation,
founded in 1888, is based in Kerala and
combines the spirituality of St. Francis
with that of Syro-Malabar Catholic
Church. Assisting the elderly, orphans,
lepers, AIDS patients, and others in
need, it has 7,078 members, a gain of
156 between 2006 and 2009.
The Congregation of the Mother of
Carmel, founded in 1866 by Blessed
Kuriakose Elias Chavara, was the Syro-
Malabar Catholic Church’s first women’s
institute. Working in 500 schools
and running 18 hospitals, these active
Carmelite sisters gained 109 members
between 2006 and 2009 and now number
6,508.
The Missionaries of Charity, renowned
the world over for of the sanctity
of their founder, Blessed Teresa of
Calcutta (1910-97), serve the poorest of
the poor in 133 countries. The Missionaries
of Charity have grown to 5,128
members, an increase of 236 between
2006 and 2009.
The Syro-Malabar Sisters of the Adoration
of the Blessed Sacrament, founded
by Bishop Thomas Kurialacherry in
1908, have spread to 100 dioceses. Centered
upon Eucharistic adoration, the
sisters also serve in the areas of education,
health care, missionary work, and
publishing. In the past decade, they
have begun to staff missions in Kenya
and Tanzania. Their membership
now stands at 4,654, an increase of 135
between 2006 and 2009.
THREATS TO GROW TH
In a November National Catholic Reporter
column, John Allen discussed
the influence of “adventurous” Indian
theologians, including Father Felix
Wilfred and Jesuit Fathers Michael
Amaladoss and Aloysius Pieris, who
“have been controversial because of the
various ways in which they try to give
positive theological value to non-Christian
religions.”
The greatest threats to the dynamism
of the Church in India, however, according
to those interviewed by CWR,
are Western-style secularism and smaller
families. “Things are changing even
here with all the modern media giving
a secular picture and a culture of consumerism,”
says Father Parippil.
“Many of the congregations in India
struggle hard to find sufficient vocations,”
adds Professor Thomaskutty.
“Ever increasing secularizing forces,
leftist thinking, antagonism on the part
of the governments, and a host of similar
factors contribute to this phenomenon.”
“A weakening in this strong and active
Catholic life is happening nowadays
as the children move out of this
strong Catholic ambience to join professional
colleges in big cities,” says Father
Madathiparampil. “In those situations,
parents [still] take a lot of pains to insist
that the children go to church for Sunday
Masses.”
The temptations to secularism become
greater with emigration. “One of
the major challenges is the emigration
of the young looking for jobs in Europe
and America. It is then they lose the
support of a culture that is permeated
with religion. They become easily susceptible
to the secularism of the countries
in which they live and fall from the
practice of their faith.”
“Indian Catholics always had large
families,” Father Madathiparampil
adds. “Now things are changing. Families
are becoming smaller. Smaller families
pose a great danger to the flourishing
of the faith, as then the number joining
the missionary ranks of the Church
will be fewer.”
Father Parippil agrees. “Now the
families are becoming smaller and
smaller. Within a few years we too will
have to face a sharp fall in vocations to
religious and priestly life.” n
Jeff Ziegler writes from North Carolina.
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